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We Don’t Need a Map

A 2017 film by Warwick Thornton and Brendan Fletcher


'The Southern Cross is the most famous constellation in the southern hemisphere.  Ever since colonisation it’s been claimed, appropriated and hotly-contested for ownership by a radical range of Australian groups. But for Aboriginal people the meaning of this heavenly body is deeply spiritual. And just about completely unknown. For a start, the Southern Cross isn’t even a cross - it’s a totem that’s deeply woven into the spiritual and practical lives of Aboriginal people.  

One of Australia’s leading film-makers, Warwick Thornton, tackles this fiery subject head-on in this bold, poetic essay-film. We Don’t Need a Map asks questions about where the Southern Cross sits in the Australian psyche.'

  • Warwick Thornton: “A few years back I got in a bit of trouble when I said I thought the Southern Cross was becoming the new swastika. Caused a ruckus alright. But it got me thinking. The poor old Southern Cross has been reclaimed as a badge for exclusion, but is there more to the story? Why is this symbol so potent? What does it mean for blackfellas?"